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Bravo Two Zero

  • TV Movie
  • 1999
  • R
  • 2h 2m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
4.5K
YOUR RATING
Bravo Two Zero (1999)
Home Video Trailer from Miramax
Play trailer0:53
1 Video
21 Photos
ActionAdventureDramaThrillerWar

This is the true story of the most highly decorated British patrol since the Boer war: an eight man SAS team inserted behind Iraqi lines during the Gulf War in January 1991. Their mission wa... Read allThis is the true story of the most highly decorated British patrol since the Boer war: an eight man SAS team inserted behind Iraqi lines during the Gulf War in January 1991. Their mission was to take out the scud missiles which Saddam Hussein was using to terrorize his enemies, a... Read allThis is the true story of the most highly decorated British patrol since the Boer war: an eight man SAS team inserted behind Iraqi lines during the Gulf War in January 1991. Their mission was to take out the scud missiles which Saddam Hussein was using to terrorize his enemies, as well as to sever strategic communication lines between Baghdad and North West Iraq. This... Read all

  • Director
    • Tom Clegg
  • Writers
    • Andy McNab
    • Troy Kennedy Martin
  • Stars
    • Sean Bean
    • Jamie Bartlett
    • Kevin Collins
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    4.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Tom Clegg
    • Writers
      • Andy McNab
      • Troy Kennedy Martin
    • Stars
      • Sean Bean
      • Jamie Bartlett
      • Kevin Collins
    • 47User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Bravo Two Zero
    Trailer 0:53
    Bravo Two Zero

    Photos21

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    Top cast39

    Edit
    Sean Bean
    Sean Bean
    • Andy McNab
    Jamie Bartlett
    Jamie Bartlett
    • Ray
    Kevin Collins
    Kevin Collins
    • Chris
    Ian Curtis
    Ian Curtis
    • Baz
    Richard Graham
    Richard Graham
    • Mark
    Robert Hobbs
    Robert Hobbs
    • Stan
    Steve Nicolson
    • Dinger
    Rick Warden
    Rick Warden
    • Tony
    Ron Senior Jr.
    • Pete
    Robert Whitehead
    Robert Whitehead
    • Iraqi Colonel
    Caz Abrahams
    • White Socks
    Nicholas Ashby
    • Jeral
    • (as Nick Ashby)
    Barry Berk
    • Cyril
    Julia Booth
    • Sally
    Melissa Carter
    • Katie
    Dimitri Cassar
    • Iraqi Officer #1
    Alison Coles
    • Jilly
    George Coutsoudis
    • Son in Taxi
    • Director
      • Tom Clegg
    • Writers
      • Andy McNab
      • Troy Kennedy Martin
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews47

    6.74.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7Unforgiven5150

    A War movie that spends more time on the characters & and mission that how much was spent on special effects!

    Well from what was written before, I would like to say 2 things to start: #1. I hope all people in the Netherlands aren't as ignorant as the person who wrote a review on war. And number 2, if you are going to bash a person by name, get it right, it's McNab, not McNam. Also at IMDB people want to hear what you thought about the movie, not your political ideas!

    I feel this movie showed a picture of what these men went through and the bonds they make being on an SAS team. In my opinion, there really aren't many other professions that earn my respect more than Special Forces of any military. These men go into situations and places they shouldn't be, full well knowing that there is a great chance they won't make it out. I feel this movie balanced that idea with the idea that these men also understand that they have to get on with life and deal with the profession they have chosen. Instead of spending the budget and trying to impress the audience with flashy special effects and the newest and neatest gadgets in film making, this film spent more time on what happened and on the characters.

    Having not read the book yet, I cannot say if it followed the book, however after watching the film it has sparked my interest to get McNab's books and also Ryan's book on the same subject.

    I did find myself rewinding and turning the DVD subtitles on more than once as they filmed the movie using the British slang and way of speaking and military jargon. While this may make it a little more difficult for anyone who didn't grow up on the streets of England, I feel this added quite a bit to the realism of the movie.

    If you can get past the fact it does not have flashy effects to keep some of you interested and the slang, I suggest this movie for any war movie buff.

    One more comment on something our friend from the Netherlands said, I don't recall McNab saying he has a license to kill at the end of the movie. I'm pretty sure it was just "I'm a soldier". Get your facts straight.
    7Yo!Jimbo

    Involving military adventure.

    Particularly enjoyed seeing the military tactics and procedures used by a small patrol in carrying out their mission and saving their butts. These guys earned their medals. Interesting that women liked this movie more than men (per IMDB votes); Must be Sean Bean.
    8draconian1313

    Realistic

    This movie is one of the most realistic Military movies that I have ever seen. Of course there are the overly powerful grenades and M-72 Rocket Launchers, but other than small Hollywood type explosions this movie shows great detail about a military patrol from the weight of a Rucksack, to the drills used to break contact with the enemy, Section attacks, how to re-organize going into a defensive position. But what the movie captures the best is the interaction between the soldiers. For those of us who have been, or currently are, this movie captures the comradery, the sense of humour that is quite unique to the military, and most importantly the bond between each of us that drives us to not quit on each other.
    9Danny-Rodriguez

    One of the few very good true war stories.

    I was first told about Andy McNabb from a half-insane guy who played the main character in a movie which was shot in my home town. I talked to him for a long time and we got talking about books and I mentioned I was a big Clancy fan. He said if I liked Clancy i should check out Andy McNabb. I hadn't seen Heat at the time but he recommended it because McNabb was a technical weapons training adviser on it. And he said that many people reacted very well to the fact that everyone in that movie held their guns and rifles correctly and changing the clip in a professional way. Later on i saw Heat and I was very impressed. I haven't read anything by McNabb yet but I think i will. definitely after seeing this.

    The film Bravo Two Zero tells the story about eight SAS soldiers who was sent behind enemy lines in The Gulf War. The opening montage of this film sucked me straight in. a composition of old Gulf War footage and news reports. it then cuts to a title card which says that this is a true story accompanied with the song "Londons Calling" by The Clash. The film continues to be very realistic all the way through. Not much clichéd hero stuff but rather to quote that guy who first told me about McNabb: "It's about misery. This is a real story about a real James Bond. No champagne or beautiful women." And enemy is not portrayed as villains or dumb like in oh so many Hollywood films. It is rumored though that McNabb exaggerated a bit on how many enemies they killed but this isn't a very large factor in the story. The story is not about how many enemies they killed. It's about survival and misery.

    This is very impressive for a TV movie and Sean Bean most certainly doesn't make it worse. Definitely recommended to you who like realistic stories like Tom Clancy's books.
    tonyearnshaw

    A gritty, understated and ultra realistic account of a true-life Gulf War incident.

    It took the BBC to tell this gripping story honestly and with authenticity. And what a story. As the Gulf War got underway in early 1991 an eight-man SAS patrol was dropped behind Iraqi lines. Its mission: destroy mobile Scud missile launchers and the lines that carried instructions from their crews.

    History shows how it all went wrong. Their communications equipment failed. The weather closed in. They were discovered and fought a series of running battles with overwhelming Iraqi forces. Finally half the patrol was captured and endured weeks of torture and interrogation at the hands of the Iraqi secret police in Baghdad.

    The story of Bravo Two Zero - the patrol's call sign and the title of this terrific British television movie - puts most Hollywood movies to shame. It is a story of courage, resilience, guile, resourcefulness and black humour. It also offers up a fascinating insight into the workings of Britain's special forces and the reality of the Gulf War.

    There are those who consider the film one-sided, and it is. What war film isn't? How much objectivity goes into the average war film? The answer: precious little. Bravo Two Zero is based on the book by Andy McNab, the SAS sergeant who led the patrol. Consequently it tells the tale from his point of view.

    But McNab doesn't come out of this a whiter-than-white superhero. He makes mistakes. He is human, fallible and, locked in a Baghdad prison, frightened out of his wits. For Sean Bean, it was the type of gritty, realistic and believable role that most actors would kill for. Throw in the authenticity of the soldiers' kit, jargon and reactions under fire - they were trained by real soldiers while McNab himself was the film's on-set consultant - and Bravo Two Zero leaps to the top spot in the (albeit limited) annals of Gulf War movies.

    And the Iraqis? They are depicted as McNab saw them: peasant farmers, ill-equipped and poorly trained conscripts, goat herders, grieving parents and, occasionally, gentleman officers.

    There is no agenda to Bravo Two Zero. Instead it seeks to present a soldier's story. And while there is another side to the story - patrol survivor Chris Ryan, who was separated from his comrades and fought his way across Iraq to the Syrian border, and freedom, also wrote an account - this is simply one man's version of events. McNab presents it as he saw it: a botched mission, eight desperate men, a series of bloody firefights and skirmishes, capture and torture and, finally, repatriation.

    If the Iraqis come across as thuggish, brutal, dim and sadistic, then history has shown that Saddam Hussein's regime was built on such people. That was McNab's experience, and Bravo Two Zero puts it on screen.

    What the film does not seek to do is present McNab and his patrol as trigger-happy killing machines. When they are spotted by an Iraqi child they spare his life rather than kill him to ensure his silence. As McNab says, it's a matter of common sense: kill a child and they will eventually face the wrath of the Iraqi people if they are caught. And, he adds: "We're not into that anyway".

    Compromised by an elderly shepherd, they talk to him, make friends and let him live. On the outskirts of Baghdad the patrol hijacks a taxi. They spare the occupants. Consider this: would the average Saddam Hussein loyalist have done the same to an elderly Yank or Brit?

    Bravo Two Zero is a superb document of a military debacle. It shows how professional soldiers, caught in a disaster, try to fight their way out. As soldiers, that's their job. And they do it exceptionally well. As the motto goes: Who Dares Wins. McNab and his men dared. Bravo Two Zero is a magnificent tribute to them.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Reference is made to Breaker Morant. Breaker was a Australian Solider who was court-martialled and executed by the British commander in South Africa, Lord Kitchener, during the Boer War. Morant's famous last words before being shot were "Shoot straight, you bastards! Don't make a mess of it!".
    • Goofs
      At approximately 36 mins, Andy checks a compass attached to his rifle. This would not happen as proximity to a mass of metal (such as a rifle or a steel helmet) could affect the reading due to magnetic interference.
    • Quotes

      Baz: Hey, Ding... is there an apostrophe in "we're"?

      Dinger: As in what?

      Baz: As in "we're in the shit."

      Dinger: Oh, yes.

    • Connections
      Featured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Special Forces Units from Movies (2017)
    • Soundtracks
      Should I Stay or Should I Go
      Written by Topper Headon, Mick Jones, Paul Simonon and Joe Strummer

      Performed by The Clash

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 3, 1999 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • South Africa
      • United Kingdom
    • Languages
      • English
      • Portuguese
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Буря в пустелі
    • Filming locations
      • Upington, Northern Cape, South Africa
    • Production companies
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
      • Distant Horizon
      • Icon Entertainment International
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $6,500,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 2m(122 min)
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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